Progress::Any - Record progress to any output
This document describes version 0.20 of Progress::Any (from Perl distribution Progress-Any), released on 2015-01-27.
use Progress::Any '$progress'; use Progress::Any::Output 'TermProgressBarColor'; $progress->target(10); for (1..10) { $progress->update(message => "Doing item $_"); sleep 1; }
Sample output:
% ./script.pl 60% [Doing item 6==== ]3s left
In your module:
package MyApp; use Progress::Any; sub download { my @urls = @_; return unless @urls; my $progress = Progress::Any->get_indicator( task => "download", pos=>0, target=>~~@urls); for my $url (@urls) { # download the $url ... $progress->update(message => "Downloaded $url"); } $progress->finish; }
In your application:
use MyApp; use Progress::Any::Output; Progress::Any::Output->set('TermProgressBarColor'); MyApp::download("url1", "url2", "url3", "url4", "url5");
sample output, in succession:
% ./script.pl 20% [====== Downloaded url1 ]0m00s Left 40% [=======Downloaded url2 ]0m01s Left 60% [=======Downloaded url3 ]0m01s Left 80% [=======Downloaded url4== ]0m00s Left
(At 100%, the output automatically cleans up the progress bar).
use Progress::Any; use Progress::Any::Output; use Log::Any::App; Progress::Any::Output->set('LogAny', template => '[%-8t] [%P/%2T] %m'); my $pdl = Progress::Any->get_indicator(task => 'download'); my $pcp = Progress::Any->get_indicator(task => 'copy'); $pdl->pos(10); $pdl->target(10); $pdl->update(message => "downloading A"); $pcp->update(message => "copying A"); $pdl->update(message => "downloading B"); $pcp->update(message => "copying B");
will show something like:
[download] [1/10] downloading A [copy ] [1/ ?] copying A [download] [2/10] downloading B [copy ] [2/ ?] copying B
If you use Perinci::CmdLine, you can mark your function as expecting a Progress::Any object and it will be supplied to you in a special argument -progress:
-progress
use File::chdir; use Perinci::CmdLine; $SPEC{check_dir} = { v => 1.1, args => { dir => {summary=>"Path to check", schema=>"str*", req=>1, pos=>0}, }, features => {progress=>1}, }; sub check_dir { my %args = @_; my $progress = $args{-progress}; my $dir = $args{dir}; (-d $dir) or return [412, "No such dir: $dir"]; local $CWD = $dir; opendir my($dh), $dir; my @ent = readdir($dh); $progress->pos(0); $progress->target(~~@ent); for (@ent) { # do the check ... $progress->update(message => $_); sleep 1; } $progress->finish; [200]; } Perinci::CmdLine->new(url => '/main/check_dir')->run;
Progress::Any is an interface for applications that want to display progress to users. It decouples progress updating and output, rather similar to how Log::Any decouples log producers and consumers (output). The API is also rather similar to Log::Any, except Adapter is called Output and category is called task.
Progress::Any
Progress::Any records position/target and calculates elapsed time, estimated remaining time, and percentage of completion. One or more output modules (Progress::Any::Output::*) display this information.
In your modules, you typically only need to use Progress::Any, get one or more indicators, set target and update it during work. In your application, you use Progress::Any::Output and set/add one or more outputs to display the progress. By setting output only in the application and not in modules, you separate the formatting/display concern from the logic.
Screenshots:
API might still change, will be stabilized in 1.0.
Using TermProgressBarColor output
Using DesktopNotify output
The list of features:
multiple progress indicators
You can use different indicator for each task/subtask.
customizable output
Output is handled by one of Progress::Any::Output::* modules. Currently available outputs: Null (no output), TermMessage (display as simple message on terminal), TermProgressBarColor (display as color progress bar on terminal), LogAny (log using Log::Any), Callback (call a subroutine). Other possible output ideas: IM/Twitter/SMS, GUI, web/AJAX, remote/RPC (over Riap for example, so that Perinci::CmdLine-based command-line clients can display progress update from remote functions).
Progress::Any::Output::*
Null
TermMessage
TermProgressBarColor
LogAny
Callback
multiple outputs
One or more outputs can be used to display one or more indicators.
hierarchical progress
A task can be divided into subtasks. If a subtask is updated, its parent task (and its parent, and so on) are also updated proportionally.
message
Aside from setting a number/percentage, allow including a message when updating indicator.
undefined target
Target can be undefined, so a bar output might not show any bar (or show them, but without percentage indicator), but can still show messages.
retargetting
Target can be changed in the middle of things.
The root indicator. Equivalent to:
Progress::Any->get_indicator(task => '')
Below are the attributes of an indicator/task:
main
Task name. If not specified will be set to caller's package (:: will be replaced with .), e.g. if you are calling this method from Foo::Bar::baz(), then task will be set to Foo.Bar. If caller is code inside eval, main will be used instead.
::
.
Foo::Bar::baz()
Foo.Bar
Specify task title. Task title is a longer description for a task and can contain spaces and other characters. It is displayed in some outputs, as well as using %t in fill_template(). For example, for a task called copy, its title might be Copying files to remote server.
%t
fill_template()
copy
Copying files to remote server
The total number of items to finish. Can be set to undef to mean that we don't know (yet) how many items there are to finish (in which case, we cannot estimate percent of completion and remaining time).
The number of items that are already done. It cannot be larger than target, if target is defined. If target is set to a value smaller than pos or pos is set to a value larger than target, pos will be changed to be target.
target
pos
stopped
State of task/indicator. Either: stopped, started, or finished. Initially it will be set to stopped, which means elapsed time won't be running and will stay at 0. update() will set the state to started to get elapsed time to run. At the end of task, you can call finish() (or alternatively set state to finished) to stop the elapsed time again.
started
finished
update()
finish()
state
The difference between stopped and finished is: when target and pos are both at 0, percent completed is assumed to be 0% when state is stopped, but 100% when state is finished.
Get a progress indicator for a certain task. %args contain attribute values, at least task must be specified.
%args
task
Note that this module maintains a list of indicator singleton objects for each task (in %indicators package variable), so subsequent get_indicator() for the same task will return the same object.
%indicators
get_indicator()
Update indicator. Will also, usually, update associated output(s) if necessary.
Arguments:
pos => NUM
Set the new position. If unspecified, defaults to current position + 1. If pos is larger than target, outputs will generally still show 100%. Note that fractions are allowed.
message => str|code
Set a message to be displayed when updating indicator.
Aside from a string, you can also pass a coderef here. It can be used to delay costly calculation. The message will only be calculated when actually sent to output.
level => NUM
EXPERIMENTAL, NOT YET IMPLEMENTED BY MOST OUTPUTS. Setting the importance level of this update. Default is normal (or low for fractional update), but can be set to high or low. Output can choose to ignore updates lower than a certain level.
normal
low
high
state => STR
Can be set to finished to finish a task.
Equivalent to:
$progress->update( ( pos => $progress->target ) x !!defined($progress->target), state => 'finished', %args, );
Set state to started.
Set state to stopped.
Get elapsed time. Just like a stop-watch, when state is started elapsed time will run and when state is stopped, it will freeze.
Give estimated remaining time until task is finished, which will depend on how fast the update() is called, i.e. how fast pos is approaching target. Will be undef if target is undef.
Give estimated remaining time added by all its subtasks' remaining. Return undef if any one of those time is undef.
Total of indicator's pos and all of its subtasks'.
Total of indicator's target and all of its subtasks'. Return undef if any one of those is undef.
Give percentage of completion, calculated using total_pos / total_target * 100. Undef if total_target is undef.
total_pos / total_target * 100
Fill template with values, like in sprintf(). Usually used by output modules. Available templates:
sprintf()
%(width)n
Task name (the value of the task attribute). width is optional, an integer, like in sprintf(), can be negative to mean left-justify instead of right.
width
%(width)t
Task title (the value of the title attribute).
title
%(width)e
Elapsed time (the result from the elapsed() method). Currently using Time::Duration concise format, e.g. 10s, 1m40s, 16m40s, 1d4h, and so on. Format might be configurable and localizable in the future. Default width is -8. Examples:
elapsed()
2m30s 10s
%(width)r
Estimated remaining time (the result of the total_remaining() method). Currently using Time::Duration concise format, e.g. 10s, 1m40s, 16m40s, 1d4h, and so on. Will show ? if unknown. Format might be configurable and localizable in the future. Default width is -8. Examples:
total_remaining()
?
1m40s 5s
%(width)R
Estimated remaining time or elapsed time, if estimated remaining time is not calculatable (e.g. when target is undefined). Format might be configurable and localizable in the future. Default width is -(8+1+7). Examples:
30s left 1m40s elapsed
%(width).(prec)p
Percentage of completion (the result of the percent_complete() method). width and precision are optional, like %f in Perl's sprintf(), default is %3.0p. If percentage is unknown (due to target being undef), will show ?.
percent_complete()
precision
%f
%3.0p
%(width)P
Current position (the result of the total_pos() method).
total_pos()
%(width)T
Target (the result of the total_target() method). If undefined, will show ?.
total_target()
%m
Message (the update() parameter). If message is unspecified, will show empty string.
%%
A literal % sign.
%
Other progress modules on CPAN: Term::ProgressBar, Term::ProgressBar::Simple, Time::Progress, among others.
Output modules: Progress::Any::Output::*
See examples on how Progress::Any is used by other modules: Perinci::CmdLine (supplying progress object to functions), Git::Bunch (using progress object).
Please visit the project's homepage at https://metacpan.org/release/Progress-Any.
Source repository is at https://github.com/perlancar/perl-Progress-Any.
Please report any bugs or feature requests on the bugtracker website https://rt.cpan.org/Public/Dist/Display.html?Name=Progress-Any
When submitting a bug or request, please include a test-file or a patch to an existing test-file that illustrates the bug or desired feature.
perlancar <perlancar@cpan.org>
This software is copyright (c) 2015 by perlancar@cpan.org.
This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.
To install Progress::Any, copy and paste the appropriate command in to your terminal.
cpanm
cpanm Progress::Any
CPAN shell
perl -MCPAN -e shell install Progress::Any
For more information on module installation, please visit the detailed CPAN module installation guide.